In general, the collective wisdom of the internet seems to write it "a eureka", but I have also found it written the other way. It starts with a vowel. But it's technically a foreign word. But it's also been appropriated by English. I'm stuck.

Also should there be a comma in the parenthetical statement in this sentence:"That is why a great debater will listen to what you say—not what he thinks you said or what he wants you to say—and then he will think about it."

In general, the collective wisdom of the internet seems to write it "a eureka", but I have also found it written the other way. It starts with a vowel. But it's technically a foreign word. But it's also been appropriated by English. I'm stuck.

Also should there be a comma in the parenthetical statement in this sentence:"That is why a great debater will listen to what you say—not what he thinks you said or what he wants you to say—and then he will think about it."

I will love you forever if you have the answers.

Although "eureka" is written with an initial vowel, the sound is not a vowel. Would you say "an useful guide"? The sound itself determines whether the "n" is necessary - vocalic sounds (produced with no obstruction of the vocal tract) follow the indefinite article "an". Consonantal and semi-consonantal sounds (such as the initial /j/ in "eureka") follow "a". Really, your choice of "a" or "an" will show your pronunciation of the word (as in "a historic" [American] versus "an historic event" [varieties of British English]). In this case, the initial sound is always semi-consonantal in English.

The dashes seem fine to me. Although I think you can make them work in a PS, dashes are semi-informal, and their use doesn't seem to be frequently prescribed (or proscribed) in the same way that commas are.

euskadi wrote:Although "eureka" is written with an initial vowel, the sound is not a vowel. Would you say "an useful guide"? The sound itself determines whether the "n" is necessary - vocalic sounds (produced with no obstruction of the vocal tract) follow the indefinite article "an". Consonantal and semi-consonantal sounds (such as the initial /j/ in "eureka") follow "a". Really, your choice of "a" or "an" will show your pronunciation of the word (as in "a historic" [American] versus "an historic event" [varieties of British English]). In this case, the initial sound is always semi-consonantal in English.

The dashes seem fine to me. Although I think you can make them work in a PS, dashes are semi-informal, and their use doesn't seem to be frequently prescribed (or proscribed) in the same way that commas are.

That said, the fact that this conversation is even happening is grounds for replacing the whole phrase out. If it's awkward for us, it's awkward for them, you hardly want them to stop there and wonder about it themselves. Just my opinion.

That said, the fact that this conversation is even happening is grounds for replacing the whole phrase out. If it's awkward for us, it's awkward for them, you hardly want them to stop there and wonder about it themselves. Just my opinion.

Nah. I mean, I'd probably rephrase, but I think we're only looking at it strangely because he asked us to look at it out of context. It's like when you write or type a word a lot, the spelling starts to look weird. I do think kublaikahn has a good point, though, and at the very least, OP should put "hear" where "listen" is.

I disagree. I think it's clear that he's making a distinction between two types of listening to the way someone is communicating. The natural way to listen to someone is to simultaneously pair intent with the actual language...here, this great debater deconstructs the two processes

I agree that it contradicts itself. You can't think someone says something before you think about it. I completely see the point he's trying to illustrate but I think it should be phrased differently. Contradictory or no, it's awkward phrasing.

I really don't see how it's contradictory. One of the most irritating (and common) things people do in an argument is assume you are saying something that you are not. They do not make an argument after thinking about what you said; they make arguments against what they imagine you said.

That said (ha) I deleted the "what he thinks you said" clause anyway, since it was not necessary to get the point across.